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Scope: Teng Wen Gong I Request type: Paragraph
Condition 1: Contains text "謂然友曰吾他日未嘗學問好馳馬試劍" Matched:1.
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滕文公上 - Teng Wen Gong I

Books referencing 《滕文公上》 Library Resources
2 滕文公上:
滕定公薨。世子謂然友曰:「昔者孟子嘗與我言於宋,於心終不忘。今也不幸至於大故,吾欲使子問於孟子,然後行事。」
Teng Wen Gong I:
When the duke Ding of Teng died, the prince said to Ran You, 'Formerly, Mencius spoke with me in Song, and in my mind I have never forgotten his words. Now, alas! this great duty to my father devolves upon me; I wish to send you to ask the advice of Mencius, and then to proceed to its various services'
然友之鄒問於孟子。孟子曰:「不亦善乎!親喪固所自盡也。曾子曰:『生事之以禮;死葬之以禮,祭之以禮,可謂孝矣。』諸侯之禮,吾未之學也;雖然,吾嘗聞之矣。三年之喪,齊疏之服,飦粥之食,自天子達於庶人,三代共之。」
Ran You accordingly proceeded to Zou, and consulted Mencius. Mencius said, 'Is this not good? In discharging the funeral duties to parents, men indeed feel constrained to do their utmost. The philosopher Zeng said, "When parents are alive, they should be served according to propriety; when they are dead, they should be buried according to propriety; and they should be sacrificed to according to propriety - this may be called filial piety." The ceremonies to be observed by the princes I have not learned, but I have heard these points: that the three years' mourning, the garment of coarse cloth with its lower edge even, and the eating of congee, were equally prescribed by the three dynasties, and binding on all, from the sovereign to the mass of the people.'
然友反命,定為三年之喪。父兄百官皆不欲,曰:「吾宗國魯先君莫之行,吾先君亦莫之行也,至於子之身而反之,不可。且志曰:『喪祭從先祖。』」曰:「吾有所受之也。」謂然友曰:「吾他日未嘗學問,好馳馬試劍。今也父兄百官不我足也,恐其不能盡於大事,子為我問孟子。」
Ran You reported the execution of his commission, and the prince determined that the three years' mourning should be observed. His aged relatives, and the body of the officers, did not wish that it should be so, and said, 'The former princes of Lu, that kingdom which we honour, have, none of them, observed this practice, neither have any of our own former princes observed it. For you to act contrary to their example is not proper. Moreover, the History says, "In the observances of mourning and sacrifice, ancestors are to be followed," meaning that they received those things from a proper source to hand them down.' The prince said again to Ran You, 'Hitherto, I have not given myself to the pursuit of learning, but have found my pleasure in horsemanship and sword-exercise, and now I don't come up to the wishes of my aged relatives and the officers. I am afraid I may not be able to discharge my duty in the great business that I have entered on; do you again consult Mencius for me.'
然友復之鄒問孟子。孟子曰:「然。不可以他求者也。孔子曰:『君薨,聽於冢宰。歠粥,面深墨。即位而哭,百官有司,莫敢不哀,先之也。』上有好者,下必有甚焉者矣。『君子之德,風也;小人之德,草也。草尚之風必偃。』是在世子。」
On this, Ran You went again to Zou, and consulted Mencius. Mencius said, 'It is so, but he may not seek a remedy in others, but only in himself. Confucius said, "When a prince dies, his successor entrusts the administration to the prime minister. He sips the congee. His face is of a deep black. He approaches the place of mourning, and weeps. Of all the officers and inferior ministers there is not one who will presume not to join in the lamentation, he setting them this example. What the superior loves, his inferiors will be found to love exceedingly. The relation between superiors and inferiors is like that between the wind and grass. The grass must bend when the wind blows upon it." The business depends on the prince.'
然友反命。世子曰:「然。是誠在我。」五月居廬,未有命戒。百官族人可謂曰知。及至葬,四方來觀之,顏色之戚,哭泣之哀,弔者大悅。
Ran You returned with this answer to his commission, and the prince said, 'It is so. The matter does indeed depend on me.' So for five months he dwelt in the shed, without issuing an order or a caution. All the officers and his relatives said, 'He may be said to understand the ceremonies.' When the time of interment arrived, they came from all quarters of the State to witness it. Those who had come from other States to condole with him, were greatly pleased with the deep dejection of his countenance and the mournfulness of his wailing and weeping.

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